As the story begins, Maggie and her mother are extremely proud of who they are and where they come from. Dee, on the other hand, seems somewhat embarrassed to have the background of an African American. Maggie’s mother refers to her as “a large, big boned woman with rough,…
Mathilde has a rich friend named Madam Georges and she wants everything that her friend madam Georges has in her house. Their families are similar in a way the only obvious difference is Mathilda isn't as fortunate as her friend. Matilda sees that her friend had an expensive necklace and wants to wear it out for a ball she is going to. At the dance the necklace is lost , Matilda feels she needs to pay for the necklace she lost. Matilda gets basically all of her money she owns and the money her husband owns and puts it towards a brand new…
The difference between Dee and her would-be family members was strikingly obvious from the first moment to the last during her visit. The first thing that caught Mama’s eye was the first thing that Dee showed of herself. “Her feet were always neat-looking, as if God himself had shaped them with a certain style” (169). As shown by her feet, and by the rest of her moments later, she was the lucky one to have beauty. She was the lucky one to go off to school in the first place. Her natural beauty was also accentuated by her clothes. Much like her personality, there was little that was hidden. A dress bright enough to “throw back the light of the sun” (169), golden earrings down to her shoulders, and bracelets that cried…
Dee asks Mama Johnson if she could take the butter churn with the butter still intact as the style has become fashionable to decorate with heritage pieces. She also demands two quilts, made by her grandmother from scraps of fabric that were once memorable articles of clothing. However, Mama Johnson has already promised these quilts to Maggie for her impending marriage. Mama Johnson now has to decide whether to yield to Dee’s demands or keeping her promise to Maggie. This is the pivotal point in the story when Mama Johnson rises against Dee and tells her no, and Dee “gasped like a bee had stung her” (Welty 556). Mama Johnson thinks, “I didn’t want to bring up how I had offered Dee (Wangero) a quilt when she went away to college” (Welty 556). Those quilts were insignificant when she went to college; however, she has now become worldlier and realizes their value. Dee’s dissatisfaction with her name is another illustration where she doesn’t accept her heritage. She had never been denied anything in her past, and when Mama Johnson denies Dee the quilts, Mama Johnson has shown how Maggie is just as vital to her and puts up a boundary with Dee. Her visit illustrates how Dee still suffers from being self-important, and that her family…
Mother describes Dee “lighter than Maggie, nicer hair, and a fuller figure. Maggie has burns down her arms and legs, she is dark skinned with a thin body, and shy about her appearance in front of people. While Dee on the other hand is lighter than Maggie with nicer hair, and a fuller figure. Dee and their mother didn’t have a great relationship like a mother and daughter should.…
Dee is sisters with Maggie in this story, she is the character who is very impolite, or that does things her way. Dee is the only educated character; it says in the short story that she left so that she could be educated. Dee is noticed as a character that does whatever she wants, and have it go her way. One example is that, Dee wears a brightly colored, yellow-and-orange, ankle-length dress that is inappropriate for the warm weather. This shows that she would wear anything she wants even if its inappropriate in any way. In the story mama wouldn’t let Dee have the quilts, and she became furious. This another example that she is very stubborn, because in the end she keeps the quilts.…
Dee is a force in the family, but she is arrogant and condescending towards Mama and her sister. Dee, too, is full of resentment about everything. She hates the way she grew up. She hates their family home. She hates that her mother was more like a man than a woman. She hates that Mama and Maggie aren't as smart and "stylish" as her. Yet, when Dee becomes captivated by the “Back to Africa” movement, suddenly her family's own heritage becomes something popular rather than a source of embarrassment. She returns home demanding the family quilts not for sentimental reasons, but because they now considered “special” and is shocked when Mama denies her of them. Dee's potential narration would be a delusional one, as even she with her self-confidence denies her connection to her family, is swayed by society's views of culture and popularity and even takes on her own new persona as Wangero.…
In the story, Everyday Use by Alice Walker; Dee is Maggie's sister and the daughter of the mother who is telling the story. Dee is a bold, and strong character in this story who has an uptight attitude. In this story, Dee is described as being lighter than Maggie in skin-tone, and nicer, fuller hair. Unlike Maggie, Dee did not really care for anything, nor did she have friends however, she did dress nice. I would describe Dee in this story as a bold, fearless girl that takes care of herself.…
Dee’s family consists of her mother and younger sister, Maggie. Mother and Maggie are well rooted in family tradition and they live on the premises of those values. Dee likes to be into the latest fashions and trends. She even changes her name to one that sounds more African and starts to date a man named Asalamalakim. However, it is apparent the moment she exits her car and steps foot onto Mama’s lawn that haughtiness has blinded her. Before even acknowledging her families presence Dee is quick to focus the attention on herself by asking her mother how she looks. Not only that, but the way in which she addresses her mother and snaps pictures of the house, as if her family is a subject of some sort of documentary, depicts her arrogance toward them as well.…
The mother is the narrator of the story and she shows the audience their differences. She also seems to be jealous of Dee in multiple ways. The mother describes herself to be “a large big-boned woman with rough, man-working hands” (Everyday Use. 256). Both girls are beautiful in their own way, but Maggie is jealous of Dee’s beauty and it seems as if Maggie is ashamed of the way she looks also due to her scars. Maggie and Dee have completely different physical appearances than each other. Maggie has a thin body figure, and…
In these plays, they both found happiness in money. In the Necklace, Mathilde “had no dresses, no jewels, nothing. And she loved nothing but appearance of its possession, led Mathilde to borrow an expensive necklace from a wealthy friend to show it off at the ball she was invited to by the Minister of Public Instruction. She ended up losing the necklace and worked half of her life to get it back. Not knowing that the necklace was fake. She didn’t want anyone to know that she had lost it, and would do anything to earn money.…
Dee (the oldest daughter) in the story takes pictures of everything in and around her mother’s home to remember how everything is. She fails to notice that they (her mother and younger sister) still use these items in their home. Dee’s character symbolizes a very modern character who values her heritage through trendiness and aesthetic appeal. The Mother shows her to be very materialistic when she does…
The characterization of both Maggie and Dee walker are used to guide readers into better understanding the relationship between two sisters in the story. Maggie being portrayed as ignorant and ordinary, compared to the characteristics of Dee, intelligent and beautiful, play a bigger role in the comparison of the two girls value of their own heritage. It is understood in the beginning…
Dee in Alice Walker’s story, “Everyday Use,” is struggling to find her place in the world and who she is. This story reflects a transitional period in her life where tradition and heritage meet a new contemporary reality. Dee was raised among the poor and ignorant, and resented it. She believed that she was cut from a different cloth, and thus her environment wouldn’t dictate her place in life. And so seemingly out of a profound embarrassment Dee was driven to break the mold of history by tirelessly differentiating herself wherever she could. She shifted her behavior, her speech, her dress, and eventually even her name. Dee hated the house she grew up in, evident in her eyes as she watched her old house burn down, as if she alone willed it to be so. She also read to Maggie and her mother condescendingly, almost to reassure them of their ignorance, and validate her own superiority. Dee had a desire for the materialistic, such as dresses for school- demands her mother wasn’t accustomed to and money wasn’t available to support. Dee’s personality and standpoint just didn’t jive with her lowly position. But she was resolute and willful in her defiance to be different, propelled by the stark contrasts of her mother and younger sister. “At sixteen she had a style of her own: and knew what style was”(600).…
The two daughters are completely opposite from each other. Dee is beautiful, smart, out spoken, and even has a man by her side, and then there is Maggie; round, not very pretty, not very smart, quiet, still lives at home and does not have any man. Dee represents the perfect daughter in any other story and Maggie represents more of the outcast. However, in this story their mother sees Maggie as the loving, caring and supporting daughter and she sees Dee as the rude outcast who thinks she can have everything she wants by the snap of her…